Sponsored

What's inside a DPFE Sensor (Pics Inside)

ctechbob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Shawn
Joined
Feb 2, 2021
Threads
32
Messages
1,588
Reaction score
4,144
Location
30666
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger XL/FX2/STX
Occupation
Adult Daycare
Decided to tear my old one apart tonight.

Answer is, not much. The actual sensor looks to be a tiny strain gauge, which makes sense.

When these things were $20 I'd say just replace them, now I'm thinking if maybe a small packet of desiccant inside that tube wouldn't give longer life to it. There is no flow through the piece so it is just small bits of pressure moving back and forth, as long as you didn't plug the whole thing, a small mesh type bag of desiccant shouldn't change much. The moisture is probably effecting the bond between the small chunk of silicone and the substrate (just a WAG).

Backside (Small tube runs to the front chamber, larger tube to the back.

Anyrate, a little middle of the night nerding for everyone.

IMG_20231009_011225726_HDR.webp



Front side. Note the water is just on this side.

IMG_20231009_011401744_HDR.webp


The actual 'sensor'. Some form of strain gauge, piezoelectric would be my guess. Not an expert though.

1696829983886.webp


The other side:

1696830086966.webp


Circuit board. Not much to see here:

1696830151020.webp
Sponsored

 

Racket

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Jan 21, 2020
Threads
22
Messages
2,205
Reaction score
3,406
Location
Here and There
Vehicle(s)
2019 Lariat Supercrew 2WD
Occupation
Transient
Curious what the direction of flow is?
 
OP
OP
ctechbob

ctechbob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Shawn
Joined
Feb 2, 2021
Threads
32
Messages
1,588
Reaction score
4,144
Location
30666
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger XL/FX2/STX
Occupation
Adult Daycare
Curious what the direction of flow is?
There's no flow. Just pressure on the front and back. It is just measuring the difference in pressure between the two sources. Nothing actually flows through the sensor. That's why I think there could be some desiccant put on the one side, you wouldn't be blocking the flow since all that needs to move through it is pressure and as long as it wasn't packed completely full it should still work just fine. I could be wrong, I'm certainly not trained in fluid dynamics.

The front is sealed from the back by way of that small sensor chip.
 

Racket

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Jan 21, 2020
Threads
22
Messages
2,205
Reaction score
3,406
Location
Here and There
Vehicle(s)
2019 Lariat Supercrew 2WD
Occupation
Transient
I zoomed in to see the moisture.

So somewhere condensation is happening. If it really is in some pressure loop (the two different sized barbs might be a clue) I guess one side is reference and the other for metering. Seems like a simple chemical treatment like for marine applications would be all, but I can see where some type of dessicant somewhere might extend the life of these. Probably would add fourteen cents to the cost.

I used to work for a company called Pressure Systems Inc. and we hand soldered, bench calibrated and potted air pressure sensors for the aviation industry. This looks similar but I recall our sensors were for R&D so didn't get exposed to the elements much but this looks somewhat similar.

Otherwise I would spend five bucks and added some barbs to slip something on the pressure side to stave off failure:
Screenshot_20231009-043828.webp

Screenshot_20231009-031103~2.webp
 


airline tech

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2022
Threads
28
Messages
4,456
Reaction score
8,517
Location
Midwest - KS
Vehicle(s)
2022 Ranger Lariat-Super Crew, Cactus Gray
Occupation
Aircraft Tech
The water vapor in the exhaust flow being acidic over time damages the seal on the Piezoelectric
Pressure Transducer which affects the ability of it reading correct pressure.
The transducer measures the pressure difference between both sides (Upstream = Exhaust and Downstream = Intake) of it and converts it to a voltage. (So, its measuring pressure drop)
Upstream Exhaust - High Side Pressure = Large Tube
Downstream Intake - Low Side Pressure (Aka Ref Signal) = Smaller Tube

So, when the EGR valve opens the Low side pressure is Higher, than it is when the EGR valve is closed. (This is how the PCM reads the Flow)

So, when it fails, improper reading of flow, it is not reading correctly, the sensor will sense no flow when there is actually flow.
To put it another way, it is not reading that the EGR valve is open when the EGR valve should be closed. (Idle and Low RPM / Load) or a low EGR flow is now equaling no flow and the PCM is controlling the EGR valve with that reading.


If you can picture a juice bottle pressure seal cap - after you have opened it and take your finger and press on it - it pops back up is an easy way to describe what the transducer is.
 
Last edited:

5thranger

Well-Known Member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Jul 16, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
1,146
Reaction score
4,387
Location
kansas
Vehicle(s)
2020 Lariat Ranger Rapid Red
Occupation
Retired
Decided to tear my old one apart tonight.

Answer is, not much. The actual sensor looks to be a tiny strain gauge, which makes sense.

When these things were $20 I'd say just replace them, now I'm thinking if maybe a small packet of desiccant inside that tube wouldn't give longer life to it. There is no flow through the piece so it is just small bits of pressure moving back and forth, as long as you didn't plug the whole thing, a small mesh type bag of desiccant shouldn't change much. The moisture is probably effecting the bond between the small chunk of silicone and the substrate (just a WAG).

Backside (Small tube runs to the front chamber, larger tube to the back.

Anyrate, a little middle of the night nerding for everyone.

IMG_20231009_011225726_HDR.jpg



Front side. Note the water is just on this side.

IMG_20231009_011401744_HDR.jpg


The actual 'sensor'. Some form of strain gauge, piezoelectric would be my guess. Not an expert though.

1696829983886.png


The other side:

1696830086966.png


Circuit board. Not much to see here:

1696830151020.png
You just unleashed the next pandemic when you opened that up.
 

P-38Ranger

Well-Known Member
First Name
Mike
Joined
May 23, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
210
Reaction score
472
Location
San Diego
Vehicle(s)
2022 Ranger Lariat
Occupation
Retired
Even though there is no flow during operation there is air “migration” so it could be contaminated over time. My thought is that, is FORD aware that their supplier has delivered a known failure part, or has the vendor, or vendors supplier, omitted a process that would mitigate this failure.
A whole new can of worms!!!

We all know that the ancient Ford Explorer Firestone tire incident was caused by Ford eliminating the department that tracked this kind of trend, and ended up paying 100 time more in lawsuits than that dept ever cost.
Is this an EPA issue? Do they fail before 100000 miles?

From the Motorcraft site.

Durability test specification- 10-years/150,000 miles
 

Grandaccess

Well-Known Member
First Name
Robert
Joined
Jul 8, 2023
Threads
5
Messages
1,095
Reaction score
2,459
Location
Binghamton, N.Y
Vehicle(s)
2021 Ford Ranger XLT FX4
Occupation
Computer Consultant
oh no, one more thing to worry about :(
could you just dry it out and reseal it LOL
 

KJRR

Well-Known Member
First Name
KJ
Joined
Feb 1, 2020
Threads
14
Messages
2,022
Reaction score
10,482
Location
Cleveland, OH
Vehicle(s)
'19 Ford Ranger, '14 Ford Edge, '74 VW Type 181
Occupation
Professional Curmudgeon
OP
OP
ctechbob

ctechbob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Shawn
Joined
Feb 2, 2021
Threads
32
Messages
1,588
Reaction score
4,144
Location
30666
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger XL/FX2/STX
Occupation
Adult Daycare
oh no, one more thing to worry about :(
could you just dry it out and reseal it LOL

If only it were that easy. The moisture is getting into the substrate and either damaging the bond between materials or altering the electrical properties of the assembly, or both.

What sucks about the whole ordeal is it used to be a $20 sensor and now it is pushing $70.

We're all still going to replace them from time-to-time, it just flat sucks that they've tripled in price.

If they come back in stock at Rockauto at the $19 price I'm buying 4 of them.
 

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,192
Reaction score
28,362
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1
If only it were that easy. The moisture is getting into the substrate and either damaging the bond between materials or altering the electrical properties of the assembly, or both.

What sucks about the whole ordeal is it used to be a $20 sensor and now it is pushing $70.

We're all still going to replace them from time-to-time, it just flat sucks that they've tripled in price.

If they come back in stock at Rockauto at the $19 price I'm buying 4 of them.
Also buy gas at $4 before it gets to $40...everything is going to sh!t...?
 
 








Top